Search & Social Media: Better Together – #SMX Liveblog

You can’t think about search without thinking about social media, and vice versa. They complement each other, and both initiatives come out stronger when they’re approached holistically. In SMX East’s “Better Together: Search + Social,” Casie Gillette, Eric Werner and Geoff Colon share their tips straight from the search and social trenches.

Geoff Colon, Eric Werner and Casie Gillette

Your Customers are Everywhere – Casie Gillette

Casie Gillette (@CasieG), director of online marketing at KoMarketing, says, “Everything is so intertwined. And when you tell me that B2B customers aren’t on social … you’re wrong. They’re on social. People search on Twitter. They’re going on LinkedIn, Quora and other forums to ask for recommendations on products and services. We have to reach our customers where they are, and that’s not just Google.”

Keywords

We have to find keywords by looking at how people are talking about us by looking at:

Content

You have to have content that people want to share in social media. Use Buzzsumo to see what’s already working. Put in a keyword phrase and you’ll see the top shared content. Put in a site and you’ll see the top shared content. Find out who’s sharing content and how.

You can also use SharedCount, which breaks down the difference between likes and shares. (A share, by the way, requires more effort and is more personal.)

An Example of Success in Search + Social

The 2015 B2B Web Usability Report is a piece of content KoMarketing created. They reached out to Marketing Land, thinking that would be the best channel for their target audience. They reached out to influencers they’d interacted with, as well as all 300 of the survey participants. They also did paid social promotion. They wrote a blog post, sent it out. The results?

30+ press and blog pickups, including Entrepreneur and Hubspot

It was a top linked page on site.

Top trafficked page

“It’s not easy to get such great results – you have to plan things like this out,” Gillette says.

Content Partnerships – Eric Werner

Eric Werner (@EricWerner) is the search marketing manager for Home Depot. When he started doing digital marketing for Home Depot, he had four primary objectives:

Connect with people

Help people

Stir emotion

Be more fulfilled

Werner began looking closely at the Home Depot’s relationships with influencers. He had to admit that what Home Depot was offering influencers, while it was working, was just okay. “We decided we had to offer something better. We started thinking about creating a special meal for each individual influencer,” says Werner.

One way Werner found to more effectively interact with influencers? Stronger hooks resulted in better relationships with significant influencers. Strong hooks are: credible, useful, exclusive or interesting. Give someone a reason to do something and they’ll be more likely to do it.

We’re Psychologists and Linguists – Geoff Colon

Geoff Colon (@djgeoffe) works as a marketing manager at Microsoft. He starts off by saying, “Marketers shouldn’t be defined by disparate platforms (Bing, Google, Facebook, etc.), but as psychologists and linguists. We examine how people talk and what they want.”

Colon’s Rules for Search + Social

Don’t talk about platforms or technology. They come and go. What’s big now might not even exist tomorrow.

Talk about how people behave. What do they do? What do they like? 2015 demands buying convenience, omnichannel solutions and 24/7 convenience. Do you get upset if it’s 2 a.m. and you can’t get an Uber? We want things on demand, here and now. Mobile changes how we behave.

Does social drive awareness and search drive intent? No. Many think this is the case and align their advertising so that social data fuels search intent.

Think about, “What keywords can one plant in social that will drive in search? What content can one plant in social that will drive SEO?”

The web and behavior aren’t linear, so to think people see content on social and then search for it is too simplistic with the complexity of human beings. People are in discovery mode on social, not intent mode, so they are more inclined to dig for information later if they’ve discovered it on their own time.

Are Google and Bing the last stop on a customer purchase journey? No. They weave in and through the web and physical places, asking lots of questions.

Bottom line: Find the source of demand and go there as a starting point, wherever it is: search or social.

About the Author

Social Media Editor Kristi Kellogg is a journalist, news hound and social (media) butterfly. Her articles appear in newspapers, magazines, across the Internet and in books such as "Content Marketing Strategies for Professionals" and "The Media Relations Guidebook." Head to Kristi's author profile to connect with her on Twitter and Google+.

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